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Carl
Elson SHRINER
Robbery
Next day
Carl Shriner, 30, died in the electric chair
for the June 20, 1984, killing of 32-year-old Gainesville
convenience store clerk Judith Ann Carter, who was shot five times.
The murder occurred while he was on parole
for armed robbery. One of 10 children, Shriner began his life of
crime when he was 8-years-old.
The New York Times
June 20, 1984
The United States Supreme Court refused today to
stop the execution of Carl Shriner, clearing the way for Florida to
electrocute him Wednesday morning for killing a convenience store
clerk.
The Court rejected the appeal by a 6-to-2 vote less
than 90 minutes after the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th
Circuit ruled similarly.
''We conclude that all of Shriner's alleged grounds
for relief have either been previously determined, have no merit, or
constitute an abuse of the writ,'' the Supreme Court ruled.
At Mr. Shriner's trial, prosecutors introduced as
evidence his confession that he killed Judith Ann Carter, the store
clerk, on Oct. 22, 1976.
Carl Elson SHRINER,
Petitioner-Appellant, v.
Louie L. WAINWRIGHT, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 82-5469.
United
States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
Sept. 9, 1983.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Nov. 4,
1983.
Appeal
from the United States
District Court for the
Northern District of
Florida.
RONEY,
Circuit Judge:
Convicted
of first degree murder and
sentenced to death, Carl
Elson Shriner appeals the
denial of his petition for a
writ of habeas corpus under
28 U.S.C.A. § 2254. Shriner
seeks relief from his
conviction on the grounds
that the trial court
improperly admitted into
evidence a confession and
evidence of other crimes.
He
attacks his sentence on the
grounds that the trial court
excluded proffered testimony
of a clergyman as to
electrocutions, the so-called
Florida Brown issue, and the
improper consideration of a
nonstatutory aggravating
circumstance. We affirm.
The facts
that led to Shriner's
conviction and sentence are
chronicled in some detail in
Shriner v. State, 386 So.2d
525, 527-28 (Fla.1980). We
briefly outline them here.
At 6:15
a.m. on October 22, 1976,
James Grills entered a Majik
Market in Gainesville,
Florida and discovered the
dead body of Judith Carter,
the store clerk. Carter had
been shot five times, and
the Majik Market apparently
had been robbed.
Police,
summoned to the scene,
learned from two women who
were the last known
customers to enter the store
that a young male patron had
remained in the Majik Market
after they left at
approximately 1:30 a.m.
earlier that day.
Ninety
minutes after the women had
left the store, a young man
with a hand gun had robbed a
motel in Gainesville. Based
on information provided by
the motel clerk and the two
women, the police prepared
two composite sketches and a
written description of a
single suspect.
The
following afternoon an
Alachua County deputy
sheriff stopped a car in
which the passenger, Shriner,
resembled the suspect's
description. After advising
Shriner of his Miranda
rights and briefly
questioning him, the deputy
took Shriner down to the
sheriff's office, where
questioning continued with
Shriner's apparent
permission following another
set of Miranda warnings.
Shriner
and the couple in whose home
he lived consented to a
search of the premises where
the police discovered a
revolver. When law
enforcement officers matched
the gun to projectiles found
in the Majik Market, they
took Shriner to the
Gainesville Police
Department.
After
Shriner signed a written
waiver following further
Miranda warnings,
questioning began at 9:00
p.m. on October 23. Shriner
initially confessed to only
the motel robbery and gave
inconsistent statements
about his involvement in the
murder. At 2:00 a.m.,
however, he finally
confessed to the murder.
An
Alachua County jury found
Shriner guilty of first
degree murder and
unanimously recommended the
death penalty. The trial
judge followed the jury's
recommendation. On direct
appeal, the Florida Supreme
Court upheld both the
conviction and sentence,
Shriner v. State, 386 So.2d
525 (Fla.1980), and the
United States Supreme Court
denied Shriner's petition
for certiorari. Shriner v.
State, 449 U.S. 1103 ,
101 S.Ct. 899, 66 L.Ed.2d
829 (1981).
Shriner
then filed a petition for
habeas corpus in federal
district court. When the
district court denied relief
in an unpublished opinion,
Shriner appealed to this
Court.
GUILT
PHASE
Admission of the Confession
Shriner
challenges the admission at
trial of his confession on
three grounds. First, he
argues the police lacked
probable cause to take him
into custody and, therefore,
the confession is the fruit
of an unlawful detention.
Second, he claims the police
did not "scrupulously honor"
his right to cut off
questioning, thus violating
his Miranda rights. Third,
he asserts that under the "totality
of circumstances," including
the allegedly inordinate
length of questioning, his
statements were coerced and
involuntary.
As to the
arrest, the police had
probable cause to stop
Shriner and take him into
custody. The officer who
stopped Shriner testified
that he bore a "striking
resemblance" to the suspect
described in the police
bulletin. The written
description and composite
sketches were based on
information provided by
three witnesses, all of whom
were interviewed by the
police.
While
Shriner claims there were
significant discrepancies
between the description and
his appearance that day, the
state judge credited the
officer's testimony to the
contrary. Findings of fact
are entitled to a
presumption of correctness
in a federal habeas corpus
proceeding. 28 U.S.C.A. §
2254(d); Sumner v. Mata, 449
U.S. 539, 101 S.Ct. 764, 66
L.Ed.2d 722 (1981).
The
police encountered Shriner
one day after the two crimes
in the same county. With
such a temporal and
geographic proximity, a
description by witnesses of
a suspect may provide a
sufficient basis for
arresting an individual who
closely resembles the
description. See, e.g.,
Chambers v. Maroney, 399
U.S. 42, 46-47, 90 S.Ct.
1975, 1978-1979, 26 L.Ed.2d
419 (1970) (police had
probable cause to arrest
suspects whose clothing and
car matched description).
Shriner's
reliance on Dunaway v. New
York, 442 U.S. 200, 99 S.Ct.
2248, 60 L.Ed.2d 824 (1979)
is misplaced. In Dunaway,
the Court held that police
cannot take a suspect into
custody for questioning in
the absence of probable
cause. Id. at 216, 99 S.Ct.
at 2258. Here, the police
had probable cause.
Shriner's
Miranda rights were not
violated. From the time of
his arrest, 4:00 p.m. on
October 23, until his
confession to murder, 2:00
a.m. the following morning,
Shriner received three full
sets of Miranda warnings,
with the last occurring
right before questioning
began at 9:00 p.m. Shriner
signed a written waiver of
his rights at that time. He
testified at the suppression
hearing that, as a former
convict, he understood the
meaning of Miranda warnings.
While
Shriner claims to have
requested an attorney prior
to the 9:00 p.m.
commencement of the
questioning session, a law
enforcement officer to whom
Shriner allegedly made the
request denied Shriner's
assertion. At the hearing,
Shriner could not remember
whether he had requested an
attorney during the
questioning session, and the
state attorney who conducted
much of the questioning
testified categorically that
Shriner had not done so.
Although
Shriner argues that, prior
to his confession, he
requested all questioning to
cease, the state attorney
who asked the questions
testified at both the
suppression hearing and at
trial that he thought
Shriner wanted questioning
to terminate only in
relation to the robbery.
Significantly, Shriner
offered no rebuttal
testimony. Crediting the
testimony of the government
attorney, the state courts
found that Shriner merely
wanted to limit the subject
matter, not end all
questioning. Shriner v.
State, 386 So.2d at 532. The
record "fairly support[s]"
this factual determination.
28 U.S.C.A. § 2254(d)(8).
Given
that fact, the state
attorney could continue to
ask Shriner questions about
the murder without providing
further Miranda warnings. In
United States v. Vasquez,
476 F.2d 730 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied, 414 U.S.
836 , 94 S.Ct. 181, 38 L.Ed.2d
72 (1973), the former
Fifth Circuit denied the
suppression of inculpatory
statements made to
government agents where the
defendant, suspected of
possessing an unregistered
firearm, told police he did
not want to discuss a
shooting but agreed to
answer questions about the
rifle itself.
When a
person in custody has
responded to proper police
interrogation by voicing a
general willingness to talk,
subject only to a limited
desire for silence, and his
wishes not to discuss a
particular subject-matter
area are respected, nothing
rooted in law or
constitutional policy makes
it improper to question him
as to any unlimited subjects.
476 F.2d
at 732-33 (footnote omitted).
The Supreme Court has
likewise indicated that the
police do not in all
circumstances have to cease
all questioning once a
suspect in any way exercises
his Miranda rights.
[Nothing]
in the Miranda opinion can
sensibly be read to create a
per se proscription of
indefinite duration upon any
further questioning by any
police officer on any
subject, once the person in
custody has indicated a
desire to remain silent.
Michigan
v. Mosley, 423 U.S. 96,
102-03, 96 S.Ct. 321,
325-26, 46 L.Ed.2d 313
(1975) (footnote omitted).
The test is whether the
state "scrupulously honored"
defendant's right to cut off
questioning. Id. at 104, 96
S.Ct. at 326 (quoting
Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S.
436, 479, 86 S.Ct. 1602,
1630, 16 L.Ed.2d 694
(1966)). Here, the state
complied fully with
Shriner's only request: to
terminate questioning as to
the robbery. In short, the
government "scrupulously
honored" the only right
Shriner exercised.
Shriner's
inculpatory statements were
not coerced or involuntary.
Besides reasserting
arguments that his requests
for counsel and to end
questioning were not heeded,
Shriner offers little in
support of his contention.
Consistent with the
testimony of the law
enforcement officials, he
does not claim on appeal
that anyone threatened him
or promised him anything in
exchange for a confession.
He merely
notes that intensive
questioning lasted for
around five hours, during
which period he remained
handcuffed in a small room
except for trips to use the
lavatory, and that his girl
friend was present in an
adjacent room in an
emotionally and physically
distraught state. Shriner
can hardly attribute his
confession to a concern for
his girl friend since he
initially told the police
she committed the murder.
Neither
has he established that the
physical surroundings and
length of questioning
without new Miranda warnings
overcame his "will ... and
capacity for self-determination."
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
412 U.S. 218, 225, 93 S.Ct.
2041, 2047, 36 L.Ed.2d 854
(1973) (quoting Culombe v.
Connecticut, 367 U.S. 568,
602, 81 S.Ct. 1860, 1879, 6
L.Ed.2d 1037 (1961)
(Frankfurter, J.)).
Shriner
equivocated at the
suppression hearing as to
whether he ever told the law
enforcement officials he
felt tired. The use of
handcuffs does not establish
coercion, United States v.
Ogden, 572 F.2d 501, 502
(5th Cir.), cert. denied,
439 U.S. 979 , 99 S.Ct. 564,
58 L.Ed.2d 650 (1978),
and an accused does not have
to be continually reminded
of his Miranda rights once
he has knowingly waived them.
Biddy v. Diamond, 516 F.2d
118, 122 (5th Cir.), cert.
denied, 425 U.S. 950 ,
96 S.Ct. 1724, 48 L.Ed.2d
194 (1976); United
States v. Anthony, 474 F.2d
770, 773 (5th Cir.1973). The
trial court properly denied
Shriner's motion to suppress
his confession.
Admission of Evidence of
Robbery
At the
murder trial, the state
called as a witness the
motel night clerk who, over
Shriner's objection,
identified Shriner as the
robber and testified that
the gun used by the robber
closely resembled the murder
weapon, which the state
introduced into evidence.
Under Florida law, like
federal, evidence of other
crimes is inadmissible to
show defendant's bad
character, but is admissible
to show, among other things,
identity. Ashley v. State,
265 So.2d 685, 693 (Fla.1972);
Williams v. State, 117 So.2d
473, 475-76 (Fla.1960). The
Florida Supreme Court in
Shriner's direct appeal
succinctly explained why the
evidence was admissible to
establish identity:
The
following facts adduced at
trial make apparent the
relevancy of this evidence:
(1) police found a .38
caliber gun and cartridges
in [Shriner's] residence;
(2) ballistics expert
Bollenbach identified the
gun found in [Shriner's]
residence as the murder
weapon; (3) at 3:00 a.m.,
only ninety minutes after
Judith Carter's murder, a
man robbed the 8 Days
Inn.... Thus, the evidence
of the 8 Days Inn robbery,
if believed by the jury,
places the murder weapon in
the hands of [Shriner]
within ninety minutes of
Judith Carter's demise. Such
evidence is clearly
probative of the murderer's
identity.
Shriner
v. State, 386 So.2d at
532-33 (emphasis in
original) (footnotes omitted).
Shriner asserts no reason
why introduction of the
extrinsic crime evidence,
given its admissibility as a
matter of evidence law,
violated the Constitution.
SENTENCING PHASE
Exclusion of Proffered
Testimony by Clergyman as to
Electrocutions
Shriner
claims that the trial court,
by precluding a Methodist
minister from testifying
about the three
electrocutions he witnessed,
denied the jury evidence
relevant to "evolving
standards of decency," in
contravention of Lockett v.
Ohio, 438 U.S. 586, 98 S.Ct.
2954, 57 L.Ed.2d 973 (1978).
Shriner
misreads Lockett. While the
plurality opinion indicated
that a defendant in a
capital case must be
permitted to introduce
virtually any evidence
relating to his character,
record or offense, it did
not hold that all evidence
proffered by the defendant
concerning the propriety of
electrocutions in general
must be admitted. Rather,
the plurality explicitly
admonished:
Nothing
in this opinion limits the
traditional authority of a
court to exclude, as
irrelevant, evidence not
bearing on the defendant's
character, prior record, or
the circumstances of his
offense.
Id. at
604 n. 12, 98 S.Ct. at 2965
n. 12. The exclusion, on
relevancy grounds, of the
minister's proffered
testimony, which did not at
all concern Shriner's
background or the crime
committed, did not violate
Lockett.
Florida Supreme Court's
Solicitation and Collection
of Extra
Record
Material (The Brown Issue)
As one of
the petitioners in Brown v.
Wainwright, 392 So.2d 1327 (Fla.),
cert. denied, 454 U.S.
1000 , 102 S.Ct. 542, 70
L.Ed.2d 407 (1981),
Shriner unsuccessfully
attacked the
constitutionality of the
Florida Supreme Court's
alleged use of nonrecord
information in appeals of
capital convictions. Shriner
acknowledges he has no proof
that the Florida Supreme
Court used any nonrecord
information in his direct
appeal, and asks us to
remand to the district court
so he can engage in
pertinent discovery. This
point is controlled by Ford
v. Strickland, 696 F.2d 804
(11th Cir.) (en banc), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 104
S.Ct. 201, 78 L.Ed.2d 176
(1983). We specifically
rejected the sort of
discovery Shriner seeks here.
Failure to Consider
Nonstatutory Mitigating
Factors
Shriner
asserts the (1) jury, (2)
trial judge, and (3) Florida
Supreme Court considered
only statutory mitigating
factors, in violation of
Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455
U.S. 104, 110, 102 S.Ct.
869, 874, 71 L.Ed.2d 1
(1982).
As to the
jury, Shriner argues that
the trial judge, by not
expressly informing the jury
it could consider
nonstatutory mitigating
circumstances, left the jury
with the contrary impression.
The jury instruction on
aggravating and mitigating
circumstances read, in
pertinent part, as follows:
The
aggravating circumstances
which you may consider are
limited to such of the
following as may be
established by the evidence
[whereupon the court read
the aggravating
circumstances in the
statutory language].
The
mitigating circumstances you
may consider, established by
the evidence, are as follows
[whereupon the court read
the mitigating circumstances
in the statutory language].
Shriner
neither objected to the
instruction at trial nor
raised the point on direct
appeal. This procedural
default precludes federal
habeas corpus review on this
issue unless excused for
cause and prejudice.
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433
U.S. 72, 97 S.Ct. 2497, 53
L.Ed.2d 594 (1977). We need
not decide whether cause
exists because Shriner has
not established actual
prejudice as required by
United States v. Frady, 456
U.S. 152, 170, 102 S.Ct.
1584, 1596, 71 L.Ed.2d 816
(1982).
First,
Shriner himself asked the
jury to show no mercy and to
sentence him to death.
Accordingly, his lawyer did
not argue to the jury any
mitigating circumstances
specific to Shriner. Given
this situation, Shriner
cannot attribute the jury's
recommendation of death to
the jury instruction. Second,
the jury instruction is
quite similar to that in
Ford v. Strickland, 696 F.2d
at 811-12, where we found
insufficient prejudice to
excuse the procedural
default.
After the
jury recommended death,
Shriner did an about-face,
asking the judge for life
and arguing what he felt
were mitigating
circumstances. Shriner
argues that the judge's
sentencing order indicates
he did not consider
nonstatutory mitigating
factors.
There is
no indication in the record
or briefs that Shriner
raised this issue on his
direct appeal. The Florida
Supreme Court's opinion in
the appeal nowhere mentions
the issue. The failure to
raise an issue on appeal, no
less than at trial, may
amount to a waiver of the
point in a federal habeas
corpus proceeding. See, e.g.,
Evans v. Maggio, 557 F.2d
430 (5th Cir.1977).
In any
event, the district court
properly disposed of this
argument as follows:
It does
not appear that [trial]
Judge Green limited his
consideration of mitigating
factors to only those
specifically enumerated in
the statute. Judge Green
found psychiatrist's reports
diagnosing Shriner as a "sociopathic
personality" insufficient to
constitute a mitigating
circumstance, since in his
view Shriner's capacity was
not diminished.
The
Florida Supreme Court, upon
review of the record and the
same pre-sentence
investigation material, also
found no mitigating
circumstances. There is
likewise no indication that
the Florida Supreme Court
limited its review to the
absence of only statutory
mitigating circumstances.
Indeed, the Court
specifically holds "[t]he
record also supports the
finding of no mitigating
circumstances." Shriner v.
State, 386 So.2d 525, 534 (Fla.1980).
It
appears clear to us that the
trial judge and the Florida
Supreme Court considered
everything in determining
whether a life sentence
would be more appropriate
than a death sentence, given
the statutory base for
capital punishment. That the
Florida courts found the
evidence of mitigating
circumstances unpersuasive
does not mean they
improperly ignored it, but
rather signifies they
performed their task to
weigh the evidence. Cf.
Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455
U.S. 104, 114-15, 102 S.Ct.
869, 876-77, 71 L.Ed.2d 1
(1982) ("The sentencer, and
the Court of Criminal
Appeals on review, may
determine the weight to be
given relevant mitigating
evidence."). There is
nothing in this record to
indicate that either the
trial or appellate court
thought any allegedly
mitigating evidence could
not be considered in the
sentencing process.
Consideration of
Nonstatutory Aggravating
Circumstances
Shriner
argues the trial judge
improperly considered a
nonstatutory aggravating
factor when he mentioned in
his sentencing remarks and
written order Shriner's poor
prison disciplinary record.
It is unclear, however,
whether the trial judge
considered Shriner's
disciplinary record to be an
aggravating factor or
whether, having already
found two statutory
aggravating factors
potentially warranting the
death penalty, he considered
Shriner's record merely to
see if any mitigating
factors existed. The judge
correctly instructed the
jury that, under Florida law,
only the aggravating factors
enumerated in the statute
could be considered, and one
might assume the judge
followed his own instruction.
Even if
the judge considered a
nonstatutory aggravating
factor, this error of state
law does not rise to the
level of a constitutional
violation requiring federal
habeas corpus relief. The
United States Supreme Court
has twice this term upheld a
death sentence even though
the sentencer considered an
invalid aggravating
circumstance. Barclay v.
Florida, --- U.S. ----, 103
S.Ct. 3418, 77 L.Ed.2d 1134
(1983); Zant v. Stephens,
--- U.S. ----, 103 S.Ct.
2733, 77 L.Ed.2d 235 (1983).
Barclay is particularly on
point.
That
case, like this one,
involved the alleged
consideration by a state
trial judge, applying the
Florida death penalty
statute, of a nonstatutory
aggravating factor. As in
Barclay, the sentencing
judge here found no
mitigating circumstances and
some proper aggravating
circumstances. He did not
consider as aggravating any
constitutionally protected
conduct.
In
upholding the sentence in
Barclay, the United States
Supreme Court treated the
consideration of the
nonstatutory factor as
purely a matter of state law,
indicating that a death
sentence may be
constitutional despite being
based on both statutory and
nonstatutory aggravating
factors. Id. --- U.S. at
----, 103 S.Ct. at 3426-28 (plurality
opinion) (citing Proffitt v.
Florida, 428 U.S. 242
, 256, 96 S.Ct. 2960, 2968,
49 L.Ed.2d 913 (1976);
id. --- U.S. at ----, 103
S.Ct. at 3432 (Stevens, J.,
concurring). See also
Stephens, --- U.S. at ----,
103 S.Ct. at 2743, 77 L.Ed.2d
at 251. The plurality deemed
particularly significant the
Florida Supreme Court's
review of death sentences,
especially its careful and
restrained use of a harmless
error rule:
[The
state cases] indicate that
the Florida Supreme Court
does not apply its harmless
error analysis in an
automatic or mechanical
fashion, but rather upholds
death sentences on the basis
of this analysis only when
it actually finds that the
error is harmless. There is
no reason why the Florida
Supreme Court cannot examine
the balance struck by the
trial judge and decide that
the elimination of
improperly considered
aggravating circumstances
could not possibly affect
the balance.... "What is
important ... is an
individualized determination
on the basis of the
character of the individual
and the circumstances of the
crime." [ Stephens, --- U.S.
at ----, 103 S.Ct. at 2743]
(emphasis in original).
Barclay,
--- U.S. at ----, 103 S.Ct.
at 3428.
In the
present case, the Florida
Supreme Court viewed any
error as harmless. It
reasoned that even if the
trial judge did improperly
consider Shriner's prison
record in aggravation, he
would have reached the same
result anyway because two
legitimate statutory
aggravating factors existed
without any mitigating
factors to counterbalance
them. Shriner v. State, 386
So.2d at 534.
In light
of Barclay, this Court
cannot overturn this
harmless error determination.
If anything, Barclay
presented a stronger case
for holding the death
penalty arbitrary because
there, unlike here, the jury
recommended a life sentence.
The
Florida courts satisfied the
constitutional requirement
to make an "individualized
determination on the basis
of the character of the
individual and the
circumstances of the crime."
Barclay, --- U.S. at ----,
103 S.Ct. at 3428 (quoting
Zant v. Stephens, --- U.S.
----, ----, 103 S.Ct. 2733,
2944, 77 L.Ed.2d 235, 251
(1983)). The state trial
judge reviewed presentence
reports regarding Shriner,
and the one allegedly
improper factor considered
by the judge involved
Shriner's record.
Focusing
largely on the prosecutor's
comment at closing argument
that Shriner had created a
great risk of death to many
people in the robbery of the
motel, a separate crime from
the murder, Shriner finally
claims the jury considered
nonstatutory aggravating
circumstances.
First,
because Shriner did not
raise this point on direct
appeal to the Florida
Supreme Court, there is a
procedural default. See, e.g.,
Ford v. Strickland, 696 F.2d
at 816-17. Second, with a
properly instructed jury,
there is nothing to show the
jury relied on the
prosecutor's remarks. Cf.
Grizzell v. Wainwright, 692
F.2d 722, 726-27 (11th
Cir.1982) (jury is presumed
to follow judge's
instructions as to evidence
it may consider), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 103
S.Ct. 2129, 77 L.Ed.2d 1307
(1983). Third, since Shriner
himself asked the jury to
show no mercy and to
sentence him to death, he
cannot attribute the jury's
recommendation of death to
any comment by the
prosecutor. Shriner's
argument as to the
unconstitutionality of the
jury's consideration is of
no avail.
Conclusion
There
having been no
constitutional infirmity in
the state proceedings,
either in the trial phase or
sentencing phase, the
district court properly
denied the petition for a
writ of habeas corpus.
AFFIRMED.
In Re Carl
Elson
Shriner,
Petitioner-appellant. Carl
Elson
Shriner,
Petitioner-appellant,
v.
Louie L.
Wainwright,
Respondent-appellee
United
States Court
of Appeals,
Eleventh
Circuit.
June 19,
1984
On
Application
for
Emergency
Stay of
Execution
Pursuant
to 28
U.S.C.
Sec.
1651.
Appeal
from the
United
States
District
Court
for the
Northern
District
of
Florida.
Before
GODBOLD,
Chief
Judge,
JOHNSON
and
HENDERSON,
Circuit
Judges.
BY
THE
COURT:
Petitioner
Carl
Elson
Shriner
is a
Florida
prisoner
under
the
sentence
of
death
for
first
degree
murder.
The
petitioner's
judgment
and
sentence
were
affirmed
on
direct
appeal
by
the
Florida
Supreme
Court
in
Shriner
v.
State,
386
So.2d
525
(Fla.1980),
cert.
denied,
449
U.S.
1103,
101
S.Ct.
899,
66
L.Ed.2d
829
(1981).
In
April
1982,
Shriner
filed
a
petition
for
writ
of
habeas
corpus
in
the
Federal
District
Court
for
the
Northern
District
of
Florida.
That
petition
was
denied
in
Shriner
v.
Wainwright,
570
F.Supp.
766
(N.D.Fla.1982).
This
Court
affirmed
the
district
court's
denial
of
the
writ.
Shriner
v.
Wainwright,
715
F.2d
1452
(11th
Cir.1983),
cert.
denied,
---
U.S.
----,
104
S.Ct.
1328,
79
L.Ed.2d
723
(1984).
On
May
18,
1984,
the
Governor
of
Florida
signed
a
death
warrant
directing
execution
of
Mr.
Shriner
on
some
date
between
noon,
June
13,
and
noon,
June
20,
1984.
Shriner's
execution
was
scheduled
for
7:00
a.m.
June
19,
1984.
On
June
13,
the
petitioner
filed
a
motion
for
post-conviction
relief
pursuant
to
Florida
Rule
of
Criminal
Procedure
3.850
in
the
Circuit
Court
of
Alachua
County.
The
court
denied
the
motion
the
following
day,
and
the
petitioner
appealed
to
the
Florida
Supreme
Court.
On
June
15,
the
Florida
Supreme
Court
affirmed
the
decision
of
the
Circuit
Court.
On
June
18,
the
petitioner
filed
his
petition
for
a
writ
of
habeas
corpus
in
the
United
States
District
Court
for
the
Northern
District
of
Florida.
His
petition
raises
the
following
grounds
for
relief:
1.
TRIAL
COUNSEL
FAILED
TO
RENDER
EFFECTIVE
ASSISTANCE
OF
COUNSEL
BY
FAILING
TO
INVESTIGATE
AND
DEVELOP
EVIDENCE
OF
NONSTATUTORY
MITIGATING
CIRCUMSTANCES.
2.
TRIAL
COUNSEL
FAILED
TO
RENDER
EFFECTIVE
ASSISTANCE
OF
COUNSEL
BY
FAILING
TO
INVESTIGATE
AND
DEVELOP
EVIDENCE
OF
STATUTORY
MITIGATING
CIRCUMSTANCES;
TO
WIT;
THAT
THE
CAPACITY
OF
THE
DEFENDANT
TO
CONFORM
HIS
CONDUCT
TO
THE
REQUIREMENTS
OF
LAW
WAS
SUBSTANTIALLY
IMPAIRED.
3.
ON
THE
NIGHT
OF
HIS
INTERROGATION
CARL
SHRINER
WAS
UNDER
THE
INFLUENCE
OF
ALCOHOL
AND
OTHER
DRUGS
TO
THE
EXTENT
THAT
HE
WAS
INCOMPETENT
TO
WAIVE
HIS
RIGHTS
TO
COUNSEL
UNDER
THE
SIXTH
AMENDMENT
AND
AGAINST
SELF-INCRIMINATION
UNDER
THE
FIFTH
AMENDMENT.
4.
TRIAL
COUNSEL
FAILED
TO
RENDER
EFFECTIVE
ASSISTANCE
OF
COUNSEL
BY
FAILING
TO
DISCOVER
THAT
CARL
SHRINER
WAS
SO
INTOXICATED
AND
MENTALLY
IMPAIRED
ON
THE
NIGHT
OF
HIS
INTERROGATION
THAT
HE
WAS
INCAPABLE
OF
WAIVING
HIS
CONSTITUTIONAL
RIGHTS
RENDERING
HIS
CONFESSION
CONSTITUTIONALLY
INFIRM.
5.
TRIAL
COUNSEL
FAILED
TO
RENDER
EFFECTIVE
ASSISTANCE
OF
COUNSEL
BY
FAILING
TO
PRESERVE
A
RECORD
OF
BENCH
CONFERENCES
DURING
WHICH
THE
FUNDAMENTAL
RIGHTS
OF
CARL
SHRINER
WERE
AFFECTED,
TO
WIT:
a.
Whether
Any
of
the
Veniremen
Excluded
for
Cause
Under
Witherspoon
v.
Illinois,
Were
Excused
Even
Though
They
Had
Not
Made
It
Unmistakably
Clear
That
They
Would
Automatically
Vote
Against
the
Imposition
of
Capital
Punishment
Without
Regard
to
Any
Evidence
That
Might
Be
Developed
at
Trial.
b.
Whether
Any
of
the
Veniremen
Excluded
for
Cause
Under
Witherspoon
Were
Excused
Even
Though
They
Had
Not
Made
It
Unmistakably
Clear
That
Their
Attitude
Toward
the
Death
Penalty
Would
Prevent
Them
From
Making
an
Impartial
Decision
as
to
Guilt
or
Innocence.
c.
Whether
Notwithstanding
the
Propriety
or
Impropriety
of a
Venireman's
Exclusion
Under
the
First
Prong
of
Witherspoon,
It
is
Improper
Per
Se
to
Do
So
Due
to
the
Fact
That
Florida
Is
the
Only
State
Where
the
Jury
Verdict
on
Sentence
Is
Advisory
AND
the
Jury
May
Reach
Its
Verdict
by a
Less
Than
Unanimous
Vote.
d.
Whether
Exclusion
of
Veniremen
Excluded
for
Cause
Under
the
First
Prong
of
Witherspoon,
Deprives
the
Defendant
of a
Jury
Which
Represents
a
Fair
Cross-section
of
the
Community.
6.
THE
ABSENCE
OF A
RECORD
OF
BENCH
CONFERENCES
DENIED
CARL
SHRINER
DUE
PROCESS
OF
LAW
BY
DENYING
HIM
ANY
BASIS
FOR
APPEAL
ON
PROCEEDINGS
WHICH
AFFECTED
HIS
FUNDAMENTAL
RIGHTS.
7.
THE
FAILURE
TO
INCLUDE
CARL
SHRINER
IN
BENCH
DISCUSSIONS
FUNCTIONALLY
DENIED
HIM
HIS
RIGHT
TO
BE
PRESENT
AT A
STAGE
OF
THE
PROCEEDINGS
WHICH
AFFECTED
HIS
FUNDAMENTAL
RIGHTS.
8.
THE
TRIAL
COURT
IMPROPERLY
EXCLUDED
VENIREMEN
FOR
CAUSE
UNDER
Witherspoon
v.
Illinois
WITHOUT
MAKING
IT
UNMISTAKABLY
CLEAR
THAT
THEY
WOULD
AUTOMATICALLY
VOTE
AGAINST
THE
IMPOSITION
OF
CAPITAL
PUNISHMENT
WITHOUT
REGARD
TO
THE
EVIDENCE
ADDUCED
AT
TRIAL.
9.
THE
TRIAL
COURT
IMPROPERLY
EXCLUDED
VENIREMEN
FOR
CAUSE
UNDER
Witherspoon
v.
Illinois
WITHOUT
MAKING
IT
UNMISTAKABLY
CLEAR
THAT
THEIR
ATTITUDE
TOWARD
THE
DEATH
PENALTY
WOULD
PREVENT
THEM
FROM
MAKING
AN
IMPARTIAL
DETERMINATION
OF
GUILT
OR
INNOCENCE.
10.
THE
EXCLUSION
OF
VENIREMEN
FOR
CAUSE
UNDER
THE
FIRST
PRONG
OF
Witherspoon
v.
Illinois
IN
FLORIDA
WAS
IMPROPER
AS A
MATTER
OF
LAW
INASMUCH
AS
THE
JURY
HAS
NO
BINDING
AUTHORITY
TO
IMPOSE
THE
DEATH
PENALTY
AND
A
VERDICT
OF
DEATH
OR
LIFE
REQUIRES
A
MERE
MAJORITY
VOTE.
11.
UNDER
THE
FLORIDA
STATUTORY
SCHEME
THE
UNNECESSARY
EXCLUSION
OF A
VENIREMAN
UNDER
THE
FIRST
PRONG
OF
Witherspoon
v.
Illinois
VIOLATES
DUE
PROCESS
OF
LAW
BECAUSE
IT
DEPRIVES
THE
DEFENDANT
OF A
JURY
WHICH
REPRESENTS
A
FAIR
CROSS-SECTION
OF
THE
COMMUNITY.
The
district
court
after
oral
argument
denied
the
writ,
holding
that
two
of
the
claims
had
been
presented
and
decided
in
the
earlier
federal
habeas
proceedings
and
that
this
successive
habeas
petition
constitutes
an
abuse
of
the
writ.
The
district
court
also
denied
the
petitioner's
motion
for
a
certificate
of
probable
cause.
On
June
18,
the
same
day
that
the
district
court
entered
its
order,
the
petitioner
filed
a
notice
of
appeal
and
made
motions
to
this
Court
for
a
certificate
of
probable
cause,
for
oral
argument,
and
for
an
emergency
stay
of
execution.
On
June
18,
we
granted
a
stay
of
execution
pending
further
order
of
this
Court
and
granted
the
request
for
oral
argument,
which
we
set
for
the
morning
of
June
19.
We
have
carried
the
motion
for
certificate
of
probable
cause
with
the
case.
After
reviewing
the
papers
submitted
by
the
parties,
the
district
court's
opinion
and
order,
and
the
transcript
of
argument
before
the
district
court,
we
conclude
that
all
of
Shriner's
alleged
grounds
for
relief
have
either
been
previously
determined,
have
no
merit,
or
constitute
an
abuse
of
the
writ.
Therefore
we
affirm
the
district
court's
denial
of a
petition
for
habeas
corpus,
deny
the
certificate
of
probable
cause,
and
vacate
the
stay
of
execution.
Rule
9(b)
of
the
Rules
Governing
Section
2254
cases
in
United
States
District
Courts
provides:
(b)
Successive
petitions.
A
second
or
successive
petition
may
be
dismissed
if
the
judge
finds
that
it
fails
to
allege
new
or
different
grounds
for
relief
and
the
prior
determination
was
on
the
merits
or,
if
new
and
different
grounds
are
alleged,
the
judge
finds
that
the
failure
of
the
petitioner
to
assert
those
grounds
in a
prior
petition
constitutes
an
abuse
of
the
writ.
This
rule
codifies
the
Supreme
Court's
holding
in
Sanders
v.
United
States,
373
U.S.
1,
83
S.Ct.
1068,
10
L.Ed.2d
148
(1963),
which,
while
recognizing
that
res
judicata
principles
do
not
apply
to
habeas
corpus
proceedings,
nevertheless
held
that
federal
courts
are
not
powerless
to
protect
themselves
from
harassing
and
repetitive
petitions.
More
recently,
the
Supreme
Court
has
expressed
concern
over
the
tactic,
which
it
recognized
as
coming
into
frequent
use,
of "multiple
review
in
which
claims
that
could
have
been
presented
years
ago
are
brought
forward--often
in a
piece
meal
fashion--only
after
the
execution
date
is
set
or
becomes
imminent.
Federal
courts
should
not
continue
to
tolerate--even
in
capital
cases--this
type
of
abuse
of
the
writ
of
habeas
corpus."
Woodard
v.
Hutchins,
---
U.S.
----,
----
-
----,
104
S.Ct.
752,
753-54,
78
L.Ed.2d
541,
544-45
(1984).
See
also
Barefoot
v.
Estelle,
---
U.S.
----,
----,
103
S.Ct.
3383,
3395,
77
L.Ed.2d
1090,
1105
(1983).
Under
Rule
9(b)
there
are
two
grounds
upon
which
subsequent
petitions
for
habeas
corpus
may
be
denied.
The
first
occurs
when
the
claims
of
the
petitioner
are
not
"new
or
different."
This
occurs
when
the
petitioner
raises
essentially
the
same
legal
arguments
that
he
put
forth
in
his
initial
petition
but
merely
alleges
or
presents
new
or
different
factual
support
for
those
claims.
Smith
v.
Kemp,
715
F.2d
1459,
1469
(11th
Cir.1983).
The
second
occurs
when
the
petitioner
presents
new
grounds
for
relief
but
his
failure
to
present
those
grounds
in
his
first
petition
was
the
result
of
deliberate
withholding
or
inexcusable
neglect.
Paprskar
v.
Estelle,
612
F.2d
1003,
1006
(5th
Cir.1980).
Once
the
state
alleges
an
abuse
of
the
writ,
the
burden
falls
on
the
petitioner
to
demonstrate
that
his
earlier
failure
to
raise
an
issue
was
not
the
result
of
intent
or
neglect.
Id.
In
reviewing
the
claims
set
out
above,
we
conclude
that
any
which
may
have
merit
were
either
raised
and
decided
in
Shriner's
first
habeas
petition
or
constitute
abuse
of
the
writ.
We
agree
with
the
district
court
that
grounds
1
through
4
have
all
been
raised
earlier,
albeit
in
slightly
different
form,
and
that
Rule
9(b)
therefore
precludes
Shriner
from
raising
them
again
in
this
successive
petition.
In
his
first
petition,
Shriner
argued
that
the
trial
judge
restricted
the
consideration
of
non-statutory
mitigating
factors
in
violation
of
the
Eighth
and
Fourteenth
Amendments.
Shriner's
present
attempt
once
again
to
raise
the
issue
of
mitigating
factors
merely
revisits
this
issue
by
couching
it
in
terms
of
ineffective
assistance
of
counsel.
His
claim
that
statutory
mitigating
factors
were
not
presented
is
based
on
the
same
facts
as
his
non-statutory
mitigating
factors
claim.
Shriner
may
not
be
permitted
to
raise
and
re-raise
the
non-presentation
of
evidence
of
his
deprived
background
merely
by
developing
"different
arguments
and
conclusions,"
Smith
v.
Kemp,
supra,
715
F.2d
at
1469,
relating
to
that
issue.
Additionally,
Shriner
instructed
his
counsel
not
to
present
to
the
sentencing
jury
any
evidence
of
mitigating
circumstances.
Similarly,
Shriner's
third
and
fourth
claims
both
involve
the
voluntariness
of
his
confession.
That
issue
was
fully
litigated
in
Shriner's
first
habeas
proceeding
and
found
to
be
without
merit.
Shriner
contends
that
at
the
earlier
proceeding
he
did
not
present
evidence
that
he
was
intoxicated
or
under
the
influence
of
drugs
when
he
gave
his
confession,
but
that
he
is
now
willing
to
testify
to
this
effect.
Because
the
evidence
of
Shriner's
intoxication
and
drug
use
is
and
has
been
peculiarly
within
his
own
knowledge,
his
failure
to
present
it
along
with
his
first
habeas
petition
was
clearly
the
consequence
of
his
own
neglect.
More
importantly,
such
evidence
constitutes
merely
a
new
factual
basis
for
the
identical
legal
claim
presented
in
the
original
petition.
Shriner's
attempt
to
couch
the
issue
in
ineffective
assistance
terms
is
once
again
unavailing.
If
such
arguments
were
allowed
on
successive
habeas
petitions,
every
petitioner
would
be
entitled
to
file
and
have
considered
successive
petitions
merely
by
alleging
a
substantive
ground
for
relief
in
the
initial
petition
and
then,
even
after
the
initial
petition
is
denied,
by
alleging
in a
second
petition
his
attorney's
failure
to
raise
the
substantive
ground
at
the
trial
stage,
claiming
that
such
failure
constituted
ineffective
assistance
of
counsel.
Shriner's
fifth
claim
also
involves
ineffective
assistance
of
counsel,
but
it
claims
that
counsel
was
ineffective
because
he
failed
to
raise
issues
that
were
not
decided
on
the
first
habeas
petition.
Shriner
presents
the
affidavit
of
his
counsel,
Dan
O'Connell,
in
the
first
habeas
proceeding,
which
states
that
O'Connell
failed
to
raise
ineffective
assistance
of
counsel
arguments
because
he
had
been
one
of
Shriner's
trial
counsel
as
well,
and
he
believed
that
there
were
legal
and
ethical
problems
with
his
arguing
his
own
ineffectiveness.
Shriner
contends
that
this
constitutes
sufficient
excuse
for
his
failure
to
raise
the
ineffectiveness
claims
in
the
first
petition
and
that
he
is
entitled
at
the
very
least
to
an
evidentiary
hearing
on
the
abuse
of
the
writ
issue.
We
find
this
contention
without
merit.
In
the
first
habeas
hearing
the
district
court
asked
O'Connell
directly
whether
he
wished
to
raise
an
ineffective
assistance
claim.
He
answered
that
he
had
scoured
the
trial
record
and
could
find
no
basis
for
one.
This
seems
to
have
been
a
reasonable
answer,
given
that
the
ineffectiveness
claims
that
Shriner
now
raises
are
without
merit.
Second,
O'Connell's
affidavit
indicates
that
he
fully
informed
Shriner
of
his
reasons
for
not
raising
the
ineffective
issue.
Shriner
nevertheless
made
no
effort
to
displace
O'Connell
as
his
counsel,
obtain
new
counsel,
or
proceed
pro
se,
and
raise
the
ineffectiveness
issue.
Such
strategic
choice
constitutes
deliberate
withholding
of a
claim,
and
subsequent
assertion
of
that
claim
is
abuse
of
the
writ.
See,
e.g.,
Montgomery
v.
Hopper,
488
F.2d
877,
879
(5th
Cir.1973).
Claims
6
and
7
are
meritless
and
constitute
an
abuse
of
the
writ.
The
petitioner
has
offered
no
reason
why
these
claims,
which
involve
the
absence
of
bench
conference
transcripts
and
the
failure
to
include
Shriner
in
the
bench
conferences,
were
not
presented
to
the
first
federal
habeas
court.
Consequently,
Shriner
has
failed
to
meet
his
burden
of
demonstrating
that
this
failure
was
not
the
result
of
intentional
withholding
or
inexcusable
neglect.
Moreover,
the
claims
themselves
are
meritless.
Shriner
had
no
constitutional
right
to
be
present
at
the
bench
during
conferences
that
involved
purely
legal
matters,
cf.
United
States
v.
Killian,
639
F.2d
206
(5th
Cir.1981),
nor
does
the
absence
of
recorded
bench
conferences
constitute
a
constitutional
deprivation
unless
it
renders
our
review
impossible.
See
Songer
v.
Wainwright,
733
F.2d
788
(11th
Cir.1984).
Shriner's
remaining
four
claims,
all
of
which
raise
claims
under
Witherspoon
v.
Illinois,
391
U.S.
510,
88
S.Ct.
1770,
20
L.Ed.2d
776
(1968),
are
similarly
abusive
of
the
writ.
Shriner
alleges
no
reason
why
he
failed
to
raise
these
claims
in
his
first
petition;
he
has
not
demonstrated
that
this
failure
was
due
to
causes
other
than
intentional
withholding
or
inexcusable
neglect.
Moreover,
none
of
the
claims,
as
presented
to
this
Court
or
the
district
court,
has
merit.
Claims
8
and
9
state
generally
that
veniremen
were
improperly
excluded
under
Witherspoon,
but
the
petitioner
is
apparently
unable
to
make
any
allegations
about
specific
improprieties.
The
petitioner
requests
an
evidentiary
hearing
which
would,
in
short,
constitute
little
more
than
a "fishing
expedition."
Such
general
allegations
do
not
trigger
the
requirement
of
an
evidentiary
hearing.
Thomas
v.
Zant,
697
F.2d
977
(11th
Cir.1983).
Claims
10
and
11
argue
that
the
exclusion
of
veniremen
whose
opposition
to
the
death
penalty
would,
in
all
cases,
prevent
them
from
voting
for
the
death
penalty
but
would
not
affect
their
guilt-innocence
decision
violates
Witherspoon
in
states
such
as
Florida,
where
the
jury
merely
recommends
sentence
to a
sentencing
judge
with
independent
discretion
and
where
the
jury's
recommendation
need
not
be
unanimous.
We
reject
this
contention.
Under
Witherspoon
a
defendant
in a
capital
case
has
no
right
to
jurors,
even
if
they
only
recommend
sentence,
whose
sentencing
decision
is
unalterably
predetermined
in
the
defendant's
favor.
For
the
foregoing
reasons,
we
AFFIRM
the
district
court's
denial
of
the
writ
of
habeas
corpus,
we
DENY
the
petitioner's
motion
for
a
certificate
of
probable
cause,
and
we
VACATE
the
stay
of
the
petitioner's
execution.
We
DISMISS
the
petitioner's
petition
filed
pursuant
to
Title
28,
Sec.
1651
and
petitioner's
appeal
from
the
June
18,
1984
judgment
of
the
district
court
that
denied
his
application
for
the
writ
of
habeas
corpus.
Finally,
we
DENY
the
petitioner's
motion
for
a
stay
of
execution
pending
our
receipt
of
the
transcript
of
the
proceedings
before
the
district
court,
conducted
June
18,
1984,
as
moot
since
we
have
now
received
and
reviewed
that
transcript.